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| | <b>Shintob> music - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | <b>Shintob> music is ceremonial music for <b>Shintob> (神道) which is the native religion of Japan. |  | | Taiko music has also been used in <b>Shintob>. |  | | Bhajan - Buddhist - Christian - Hindu - Jewish - Muslim - Native American - Rastafarian - <b>Shintob> - Zoroastrian |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shinto_music
(106 words)
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| | Past and Present Orchestration |
 | | <b>Shintob> music is called kagura and is specifically used in Imperial shrines. |  | | At the Heian court, Mi-kagura is exclusively a male event, though <b>Shintob> female dancers (miko) are found to dance and entertain at local shrines. |  | | General <b>Shintob> chaning, norito, involve unison choruses of men that are accompanied by the hichiriki oboe, kagura-bue flute, and the wagon zither. |
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http://pages.cthome.net/chegment/korch.htm
(106 words)
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| | Definition of Buddhist music |
 | | Buddhist - Christian- Hindu- Jewish- Muslim- Native American - Rastafarian- <b>Shintob> |  | | Composer Philip Glass is a practicing Buddhist but claims it does not influence his music directly: "The real impact of Buddhist practice affects how you live your life on a daily basis, not how you do your art." (Kostelanetz, 1992) |  | | Taiwanese Buddhist Music (http://pratyeka.org/library/audio/unknown%20-%20taiwanese%20buddhist%20music.mp3) - an MP3 for free download. |
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http://www.wordiq.com/definition/Buddhist_music
(178 words)
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| | Wikipedia:WikiProject World music - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | This includes articles like Music of Sweden, Music of Tanzania, Inuit music, <b>Shintob> music, Roma music and Esperanto music; all member articles should be listed at list of cultural and regional genres of music. |  | | Music of the United Kingdom and Music of Canada both have three different boxes; one of the UK boxes (such as at Music of the Cayman Islands) is a variant of the Caribbean musicbox, which has different varieties at Music of Jamaica and Music of Martinique and Guadeloupe, among others. |  | | In some cases, variants might be used -- Music of the United States uses a musicbox which is different than those used for Music of Hawaii, Music of Puerto Rico, Music of Louisiana and Music of Texas, each of which have their own varieties. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_World_music
(820 words)
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| | <b>Shintob> music (from East Asian arts) -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | Thus, special <b>Shintob> music was devised for use in Imperial shrines, a tradition already familiar from the discussion of China and Korea. |  | | Music > The music of Japan > The Heian period > <b>Shintob> music |  | | In Japan such <b>Shintob> music is called kagura. |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-74475?tocId=74475
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| | <b>SHINTOb> MUSIC |
 | | FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA presents <b>Shintob> Festival Music <b>SHINTOb> FESTIVAL MUSIC was filmed in Tokyo at the 1993 Sanja Matsuri in the Asakusa district, and at the Sumiyoshi, Hachiman, and Meiji... |  | | <b>Shintob> music [ edit ] References Littleton, C. Scott (2002). |  | | Year in the Life of a <b>Shintob> Shrine Book by John K. Nelson Japanese <b>Shintob> Ritual Music Audio CD by Various Artists January 30, 2004 Copyright © 1996-2005 japan-guide.com All rights reserved site... |
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http://www.xcite-esports.de/49206
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| | Music in Japan |
 | | The earliest extant description of <b>Shintob> music, or kagura (music of the gods), is preserved in the myth of the sun goddess Amaterasu, who, having been offended by her brother, has hidden her light in the Rock-Cave of Heaven. |  | | Gagaku is made up of three bodies of musical pieces: togaku, said to be in the style of the Chinese Tang Dynasty (618-907); komagaku, said to have been transmitted from the Korean peninsula; and music of native composition associated with rituals of the <b>Shintob> religion. |  | | The Meiji government, with the intention of modernizing Japanese music, introduced the Western music instruction in schools, and in 1879, Izawa Shuji, a government bureaucrat who had studied in the United States, commissioned songs which were written using a pentatonic melody derived by exclusion of a major fourth and seventh. |
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http://www.sg.emb-japan.go.jp/JapanAccess/music.htm
(1936 words)
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| | Keith A |
 | | Discusses the court music of gagaka including repertoire and ritual music of the <b>Shintob>. |  | | Wade, Bonnie C. Tegotomono: music for the Japanese Koto. |  | | Breaks down the musical form of Koto music by way of culture, idiomatic language, and compositions. |
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http://www.people.iup.edu/rahkonen/ilwm/japan.bib.htm
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| | <b>Shintob> 2 |
 | | Some organizations of both Shrine and Sect <b>Shintob> have recently begun to compose solemn religious songs to praise kami, making use of Western musical forms. |  | | State <b>Shintob> was regarded as a state cult and a national ethic and not as "a religion." The free interpretation of its teachings by individual <b>Shintob> priests was discouraged. |  | | <b>Shintob> of this nature was called State <b>Shintob> and came under the control of the Bureau of Shrines in the Ministry of Home Affairs. |
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http://www.crystalinks.com/shinto2.html
(1350 words)
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| | Music in Japan |
 | | The earliest extant description of <b>Shintob> music, or kagura (music of the gods), is preserved in the myth of the sun goddess Amaterasu, who, having been offended by her brother, has hidden her light in the Rock-Cave of Heaven. |  | | Gagaku is made up of three bodies of musical pieces: togaku, said to be in the style of the Chinese Tang Dynasty (618-907); komagaku, said to have been transmitted from the Korean peninsula; and music of native composition associated with rituals of the <b>Shintob> religion. |  | | The Birth of Japanese Pop Music, or Kayokyoku//New Music and After//Western Classical Music in Japan |
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http://www.sg.emb-japan.go.jp/JapanAccess/music.htm
(1936 words)
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| | Malm, Traditional Japanese Music & Musical Instruments |
 | | The book opens with a brisk and eloquent history of Japan's musical life, then moves on to its religious music, <b>Shintob>, Buddhist, and Christian; its court music; the music of the noh drama; and the music of specific instruments: biwa, shakuhachi, koto, and shamisen. |  | | Among his publications are Nagauta: The Heart of Kabuki Music (1963); Music Cultures of the Pacific, the Near East, and Asia (1966); Six Hidden Views of Japanese Music (1986); and--a joint effort--Theater as Music (1990), in which one act of a bunraku puppet play is examined. |  | | When William Malm published his wide-ranging study of traditional Japanese music in 1959, it was the first time in the twentieth century that such a work had been brought out in a Western language. |
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http://www.shakuhachi.com/B-Malm.html
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| | Japanese |
 | | Do not confuse shomyo with <b>shintob> music, because shomyo only refers to the chanting, whereas <b>shintob> music for Buddhist festivals also uses instruments. |  | | The introduction of Buddhism in the 6th century and Shomyo (Buddhist chanting) heavily influences music. |  | | It can be played solo, or may be combined with shakuhachi or shamisen or both in music. |
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http://ucsub.colorado.edu/~millerl/Japanese.html
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| | [No title] |
 | | <b>Shintob> (神道 ''Shint?'') (sometimes called Shintoism) is a native religion of Japan and was once its state religion. |  | | The word "<b>Shintob>" is derived from the Chinese terms shen and tao, which translateroughly as "the way of the gods. |  | | Thus, <b>Shintob> means "the way of the gods."After World War II, <b>Shintob> lost its status of state religion; some <b>Shintob> practices and teachings, once given a great deal of prominence during the war, are no longer taught nor practiced today, and some remain largely as everyday activities without r! |
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http://ifvali166.seesaa.net
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| | Religious music - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | <b>Shintob> music (神楽) is ceremonial music for <b>Shintob> (神道) which is the native religion of Japan. |  | | Sephardic music, the music of Spanish Jews, was born in medieval Spain, with cancioneros being performed at the royal courts. |  | | Nyabinghi music is the most integral form of Rastafarian music. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_music
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| | <b>Shintob> |
 | | Important features of <b>Shintob> art are shrine architecture and the cultivation and preservation of ancient art forms such as No theater, calligraphy and court music (gagaku), an ancient dance music that originated at the courts of Tang China (618 - 907). |  | | <b>Shintob> priests became state officials, important shrines started to received governmental funding, Japan's creation myths were used to foster an emperor cult, and efforts were made to separate and emancipate <b>Shintob> from Buddhism. |  | | <b>Shintob> is an optimistic faith, as humans are thought to be fundamentally good, and evil is believed to be caused by evil spirits. |
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http://www.japan-guide.com/e/e2056.html
(549 words)
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| | regional |
 | | Music for koto and shamisen (developing later) usually use the In scale (or "Miyako- bushi"), also pentatonic but with half-steps between 1st and 2nd and 5th and 6th notes, e.g., D - E-flat - G - A - B-flat (sometimes "auxiliary notes" are used, transforming the 5-note scales into 7-note scales) |  | | <b>Shintob> Festivals (matsuri) associated with community shrines have become major outlet for Matsui-Bayashi groups, even in urban areas such as Tokyo |  | | Traditional Japanese music (classical and folk) begin to fade in significance for the average Japanese |
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http://www.uwgb.edu/ogradyt/world/japan.htm
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| | shintoism |
 | | * Kagura {kah-goo-rah}, or <b>Shintob> music and dancing |  | | Tsurugaoka Hachimangu Shrine used to be a typical mixture of <b>Shintob> and Buddhism elements and a prime example of syncretism as Yoritomo Minamoto {me-nah-moh-toh yo-re-toh-mo} (1147-1199), the founder of the Shrine, was in the lineage of the Imperial Family. |  | | Most of <b>Shintob> shrines house sacred objects such as mirrors (the symbol of the Sun Goddess), swords and jewel (those three objects are the imperial regalia) on the altar where the gods are believed to reside, and the objects serve as spirit substitutes for the gods. |
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http://www.asahi-net.or.jp/~QM9T-KNDU/shintoism.htm
(2669 words)
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| | Japanese |
 | | Do not confuse shomyo with <b>shintob> music, because shomyo only refers to the chanting, whereas <b>shintob> music for Buddhist festivals also uses instruments. |  | | The introduction of Buddhism in the 6th century and Shomyo (Buddhist chanting) heavily influences music. |  | | Popular during the Kamakura Period, this instrument is used primarily for storytelling (heke-biwa) and also traditionally in gagaku. |
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http://ucsub.colorado.edu/~millerl/Japanese.html
(583 words)
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| | MUS 136 |
 | | Review the <b>Shintob> Festival video, the section in the textbook on <b>Shintob> and Buddhist music, and the appropriate tracks on the CD on Reserve |  | | Two basic types of dance: togaku ("music of the left"--pieces from T'ang China or India, red robes) and komagaku ("music of the right"--pieces from Korea and Manchuria, green robes) |  | | In pieces for full ensemble, aerophones play the main melody, chordophones play abstractions of the melody and punctuations, membranophones also play the punctuations (see the video for details) |
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http://eric.mandi-eric.com/sp2003/mus13601feb24.htm
(583 words)
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| | 1 Million Links, Religions, Other, Shintoism |
 | | Folk Entertainment / <b>Shintob> Music and Dancing / Ono Kagura (... |  | | The Futahashira shrine chief priest of a <b>Shintob> shrine... |  | | All that is left of one <b>Shintob> shrine in Nagasaki. |
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http://wonderfulword.com/1millionlinks/Shintoism.html
(1783 words)
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| | Japanese music on Encyclopedia.com |
 | | The indigenous music present before AD 453 consisted of chanted poems ( reyei and imayo), traditional war and social songs( kume-uta and saibara), and the kagura, solemn <b>Shintob> temple music. |  | | It is orchestral music using the sho (a mouth organ, the Chinese sheng), the shakuhachi (a long flute), and the hichiriki (a small oboe). |  | | The music is primarily monophonic, although heterophony occurs in orchestral music and in pieces for voice and koto. |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/J/Japan-mus.asp
(1783 words)
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| | <b>Shintob> Festival Music |
 | | <b>SHINTOb> FESTIVAL MUSIC was filmed in Tokyo at the 1993 Sanja Matsuri in the Asakusa district, and at the Sumiyoshi, Hachiman, and Meiji Shrines. |  | | He explains the variety of musical traditions in <b>Shintob> festivals and discussed the use of musical instruments. |  | | Dr. Sidney Brown, Professor of Japanese History at the University of Oklahoma, introduces the rituals of <b>Shintob> and the rich tradition of Japanese mythology. |
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http://www.ou.edu/earlymusic/shinto.html
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| | <b>shintob> |
 | | <b>Shintob> music: kagura - origins in entertainment for the Sun Goddess |  | | <b>Shintob>: way of the Gods (indigenous religious practices) |  | | Mi-kagura: sacred music of the Imperial court: (Imperial palace, Kyoto, Nara, Ise) |
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http://stripe.colorado.edu/~keister/shinto.html
(114 words)
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| | Amazon.co.uk: Books: <b>Shintob> the Kami Way |
 | | <b>Shintob>, the indigenous faith of the Japanese people, continues to fascinate and mystify both the casual visitor to Japan and the long-time resident. |  | | Further examination of Shintos lively festivals, worship, music, and sacred regalia illustrates Shintos influence on all levels of Japanese life. |  | | This introduction unveils Shintos spiritual characteristics and discusses the architecture and function of <b>Shintob> shrines. |
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http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0804835578
(353 words)
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| | A different kind of jazz |
 | | The hollow-bodied instrument's full name--kami no koto-- literally means "oracle of the god," and was used in <b>Shintob> practices that continue in modern Japan. |  | | In her solo performances, Masaoka uses her background in Japanese court music, new music and improvisation to create a span from ninth century Japan to sensor and digital technology. |  | | Masaoka also composes her own music, and was recently commissioned by the New York-based Bang on a Can All-Stars, a contemporary new music group, to create an original piece. |
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http://www.paloaltoonline.com/weekly/morgue/listings/2000_Jul_21.KOTO21.html
(679 words)
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| | <b>Shintob> -- Beliefnet.com |
 | | Music, dancing, and praise are also offered, and <b>Shintob> priests bless all with the branch of the sacred sakaki tree dipped in holy water. |  | | <b>Shintob> recognizes no all-powerful deity and is a diverse set of traditional rituals and ceremonies, rather than a system of dogmatic beliefs or ethics. |  | | Main Tenets: <b>Shintob> (or kami no michi, "way of the kami," or gods) is a prehistoric religious tradition indigenous to Japan, which has been influenced by Buddhism and Chinese religions and provides a worldview that has become central to Japanese culture and national identity. |
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http://www.beliefnet.com/index/index_10030.html
(476 words)
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| | JAPANESE CULTURE |
 | | Traditional Japanese weddings based on the <b>Shintob> religion are major occasion with wearing of the Japanese kimono including the wedding kimono. |  | | To many, the character of koto music is evocative of traditional Japan with the attributes of the western harp, dulcimer and lute. |  | | Shichi-go-san is a festival celebrated by parents on the fifteenth of November in Japan, to mark the growth of their children as they turn three, five and seven years of age. |
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http://www.japaneselifestyle.com.au/culture/culture.html
(384 words)
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| | New York center open |
 | | The ceremony began with the traditional <b>Shintob> Ritual of Blessing conducted by the Rev. Masahiko Takizawa of the Kotohira Shrine of Hawaii and the Rev. Tetsuji Ochiai of the Tsubaki Grand Shrine of America. |  | | A highlight of the colorful ceremony was the Miko-mai, an ancient ceremonial dance presented by the Shrine maidens and accompanied by the Gagaku court music. |  | | The International <b>Shintob> Foundation, aimed at establishing a proper overseas image for Japan's ancient religion and developing it as a modern faith that relates positively to business, political and social conduct, has established a New York Center facing the United Nations Headquarters. |
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http://www.shinto.org/isf/eng/newyork-e.html
(384 words)
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| | Soh Daiko - Home |
 | | The drum is an instrument that dates back to prehistory; developing out of ancient agricultural rites and the music of <b>Shintob> shrines and Buddhist temples, the beat of the taiko resounds throughout Japanese culture, summoning gods and ancestor’s spirits to ritual entertainments and festivals, driving away evil forces, and giving strength and courage to warriors. |  | | The group’s varied repertoire includes traditional compositions from the <b>Shintob> music tradition, pieces adapted from existing taiko compositions and original compositions/arrangements by members of Soh Daiko. |  | | But in the past 50 years, the word taiko has come to represent a new tradition of mass drumming that has spread across the globe to become a vibrant, contemporary performing art. |
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http://www.sohdaiko.org/home.html
(440 words)
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